Do NOT Hop On This Bus At Night | True Asian Ghost Story
Автор: Hong Kong Ghost Horror
Загружено: 2025-12-30
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In tonight's episode, we dive into six terrifying true stories from across Asia, where ordinary public transportation becomes a gateway to the supernatural. Based on real events and folklore passed down through generations, these tales will make you think twice before boarding that last bus home.
First, we travel to Taipei, where Route 88 circles the city's outskirts every night at 11:47. Drivers warn never to stop after the final terminal, but one exhausted driver breaks the rule. A soaking wet woman boards, pays with coins that haven't been used in decades, and asks for a stop that no longer exists. CCTV later shows the bus stopping by itself on an unlit road. The woman never appears on camera, but her wet footprints do.
Then we head to Seoul, where commuters whisper about the back row on late buses. Anyone who sits there feels watched, then hears breathing that isn't their own. A student films it for proof. The video records only his frozen face and a child's voice asking if he can move closer. The bus arrives at the depot with one seat soaked, as if someone small had been crying there all night.
In Bangkok, a night bus picks up a monk who silently ties red string bracelets on sleeping riders. Those who wake remove them and forget by morning. Those who don't are later listed in traffic reports, floods, or sudden fevers. One conductor keeps a bracelet as a joke. Weeks later, he hears chanting behind him every time the bus slows, and the bracelet tightens, thread by thread.
A Manila jeepney runs past midnight with a broken route display that flickers unfamiliar names. Passengers notice the stops correspond to recent obituaries. Each time the jeepney brakes, one name disappears from the sign. When a drunk man laughs and shouts his own name, the display blinks, accepts it, and the engine cuts. The driver swears he never saw the man leave, only the seatbelt snap open.
In rural Japan, a night bus replaces a cancelled train after a landslide. At Platform Three, an old woman boards and warns riders not to step off until sunrise. One man ignores her to smoke during a stop in the fog. The bus waits. When he tries to return, the doors won't open. At dawn, the driver finds only a shoe by the curb and a new warning taped to the dashboard.
Finally, in Singapore, the last night bus from the interchange sells a single paper ticket after midnight, even though the system went cashless years ago. The ticket prints without a destination, only a time that's already passed. A security guard rides along once and notices one passenger never reflects in the windows. At each stop, he hears a soft tap as if someone is punching in. When the bus reaches the depot, every seat is empty except one, where the paper ticket lies warm, stamped again and again with the same expired time.
These stories are true accounts and folklore explained through generations of Asian culture. Whether you believe them or not, one thing is certain: public transportation in Asia carries more than just passengers.
Disclaimer: The visuals shown are purely for storytelling and dramatic effect, and do not represent the real people or events behind these tales. These stories are based on legends, folklore explained, and historical accounts passed down through generations. Whether fact or folklore is up to you.
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